Mon, 17 November 2008 Common Loss looks at how dementia is viewed and cared for by a variety of cultural groups in Hamilton and Halton. In this episode: how mealtimes, food and its preparation connect us emotionally and socially, even as memory fades.
Dr. Heather Keller is a Professor in the Department of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition at the Univeristy of Guelph. On October 30, 2008 she gave a public lecture at St. John's Anglican Church in Ancaster, Ontario. She spoke about how import the rituals of preparing and enjoying food together are to creating a sense of worth, belonging and continuity in those living with memory loss. She then took questions from the audience.
Look for the next podcast in the series coming soon and please consider subscribing to this series to get the next one as soon as we launch it.
Running Time: 1:13 Host: Wayne MacPhail |
Mon, 9 June 2008 Mahbuba Hokaky came to Canada from Afghanistan in 1994 after escaping with her husband and two young daughters from a violent faction for whom educated women, and especially female doctors like Mahbuba were anathema. She arrived with no English, little money and facing a future a world apart from the one she imagined for her family. Now, years later she wants to study at Mohawk College in the cultural interpreter program to help the Alzheimer Society of Hamilton and Halton bring an understanding of dementia to her people. She joined in me the Society’s offices in the west of Hamilton and discusses the gap between healthcare in the country she left behind in Canada and the shame dementia brings on an Afghani family.Running time: 23 min. / 24 Mb Host: Wayne MacPhail Direct download: Common_Loss_Episode_Four_-_Afghanistan.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 11:44 AM Comments[1] |
Fri, 30 November 2007 Gabriela Luchsinger is a registered social worker here in Hamilton, in Southern Ontario. In 1973 Gabriela and her family fled Chile after the military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet, who founded a brutal dictatorship that held sway in Chile until 1990. Gabriela's husband had been jailed and narrowly escaped a death that was visited up friends, colleagues and family members. Gabriella spoke with me about those memories and the role that memory plays in her culture. Running time: 30 min. / 24 Mb Host: Wayne MacPhail Direct download: The_Chilean_Community_-_Gabriela_Luchsinger.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 2:54 PM Comments[0] |

Common Loss looks at how dementia is viewed and cared for by a variety of cultural groups in Hamilton and Halton. In this episode: how mealtimes, food and its preparation connect us emotionally and socially, even as memory fades.
Dr. Heather Keller is a Professor in the Department of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition at the Univeristy of Guelph. On October 30, 2008 she gave a public lecture at St. John's Anglican Church in Ancaster, Ontario. She spoke about how import the rituals of preparing and enjoying food together are to creating a sense of worth, belonging and continuity in those living with memory loss. She then took questions from the audience.
Look for the next podcast in the series coming soon and please consider subscribing to this series to get the next one as soon as we launch it.
Mahbuba Hokaky came to Canada from Afghanistan in 1994 after escaping with her husband and two young daughters from a violent faction for whom educated women, and especially female doctors like Mahbuba were anathema. She arrived with no English, little money and facing a future a world apart from the one she imagined for her family. Now, years later she wants to study at Mohawk College in the cultural interpreter program to help the Alzheimer Society of Hamilton and Halton bring an understanding of dementia to her people. She joined in me the Society’s offices in the west of Hamilton and discusses the gap between healthcare in the country she left behind in Canada and the shame dementia brings on an Afghani family.
Gabriela Luchsinger is a registered social worker here in Hamilton, in Southern Ontario. In 1973 Gabriela and her family fled Chile after the military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet, who founded a brutal dictatorship that held sway in Chile until 1990.